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Collectively, members of the class Amphibia are facing massive reductions in total numbers, and the overall biodiversity of amphibians across the globe is under threat. Scientists have determined that global climate change and habitat destruction…

A fast-growing tree, Ochroma pyramidale (also known as O. lagopus), which is widely distributed in tropical America, especially in Ecuador. Balsa (Ochroma pyramidale; also, O. lagopus) belongs to the mallow family, Malvaceae, in the order Malvales.…

A deciduous tree of the genus Betula, which is distributed over much of North America, in Asia (south to the Himalayas), and in Europe. Birch trees are assigned to the genus Betula. They belong to the family Betulaceae (which also contains alders,…

Common pigments, typically of yellow, orange, or red hues, that serve in both light absorption and the protection against too much light in photosynthesis as well as in the vision process. Carotenoids comprise a class of labile, easily oxidizable,…

A linear polymer of (1→4)-linked β-d-glucopyranosyl units, and the most abundant of all naturally occurring substances. Cellulose is the main polysaccharide in living plants, forming the skeletal structure of the plant cell wall. Cellulose…

The generic name for any of the intensely green, blue, or purple pigments found in higher plants, algae, and photosynthetic bacteria that are an integral part of photosynthesis. Chlorophyll is the name given to any member of a group of important…

A tropical evergreen shrub or small tree of the genus Coffea (family Rubiaceae), a native of northeast Africa and adjacent southwest Asia, cultivated for the seeds (coffee beans) of its fruit. Members of the genus Coffea (Fig. 1) grow mainly between…